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Beni B. Dangi; Maggie A. Cooper; Nathaniel Carnegie; Judy Clark – Journal of Chemical Education, 2025
A laboratory experiment has been designed for teaching laboratories aimed at training students in the basics of spectroscopy in junior and senior level undergraduate chemistry courses. Despite the ubiquity of light-based tools in modern science, students often find it difficult to comprehend light and light-matter interactions. A portable…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Spectroscopy
Anna Laguta – Journal of Chemical Education, 2025
Colloidal stability is one of the most important criteria in the application strategy of colloidal nanoparticles in the continuous phase. The branches include ecology, involving coagulation as a purification method; medicine as nanocarriers; biology as blood coagulation, etc. A chemist versed in these concepts is a high-performing chemist in…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Laboratory Experiments, Chemistry, Light
Matsutani, Akihiro – Physics Teacher, 2022
We demonstrated that an optimally designed pinhole camera can be used as an astronomical tool to observe the libration and apparent diameter change of the Moon at night. The libration and apparent diameter change of the Moon were observed using a handmade pinhole camera with a diameter of 0.65 mm and a focal length of 400 mm. It was found that the…
Descriptors: Photography, Light, Optics, Astronomy
Bishnu P. Regmi; Shantel Fleming – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Photochemical reactions are the reactions that are induced by light. Many of these reactions are found in natural processes, including photosynthesis and the formation and decomposition of ozone in the atmosphere. Classroom demonstrations are effective in enhancing students' learning and retention. Herein, we have developed a simple demonstration…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Light, Science Instruction, Retention (Psychology)
Fuster, Gonzalo; Rojas, Roberto – Physics Teacher, 2021
The photoelectric effect consists of electrons emerging from the region near the inner surface of a metallic solid toward the outside vacuum, when the metal surface is illuminated. The effect depends on the frequency of the light waves and the properties of the metal surface. In particular, a minimum or "threshold" frequency of light is…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Energy, Metallurgy
Balta, Nuri – Physics Teacher, 2022
In introductory texts, some "special" rays are selected to draw the image produced by lenses and mirrors. After teaching special rays, students usually ask how to draw an arbitrary ray. One method for drawing an arbitrary ray is the "tilted principal axis." As an example, the tracing of an arbitrary ray in diverging lens is…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, Optics, Visual Aids
Pal, Arnab; Panchadhyayee, Pradipta; Sahu, Kriti R.; Syam, Debapriyo – Physics Teacher, 2022
The refractive index is a number that governs how light changes its direction of propagation as it enters one material medium from another. This phenomenon is known as refraction and the angles of incidence and refraction of light, referred to the normal to the interface of the two media at the point of incidence, are related by Snell's law. The…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Light, Scientific Concepts
DiLisi, Gregory A. – Physics Teacher, 2022
On April 14, 1912, the British passenger liner R.M.S. "Titanic" struck an iceberg. The ship sank in a fraction of the time designers had estimated following a worst case scenario. The purpose of this article is to examine the atmospheric refractive phenomena that might have played a significant role in obscuring the iceberg from…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Introductory Courses, Physics, Oceanography
Lazos, Panagiotis; Nezis, Anastasios; Kyriazopoulos, Nikolaos – Physics Teacher, 2022
The interference pattern between two harmonic oscillations with slightly different frequencies are called beats. The beats, as a combined motion, have two different periods, one approximately equal to the period of the original oscillations, and another that is significantly longer and is related to the variable amplitude of the motion. The main…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Motion, Science Experiments
Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2021
The overhead projector is perhaps passing out of use, but it is still a useful device with which to do lecture demonstrations. In my early years at Kenyon I was teaching the pre-med course, and found that the overhead projector was an ideal platform for showing the phenomena of polarized light. This note is a discussion of how I learned to use the…
Descriptors: Projection Equipment, Light, Demonstrations (Educational), Science Instruction
O'Donoghue, J.; Fitzsimmons, L. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
This work describes the design and testing of a low-cost light-emitting diode (LED)-based nephelometer for turbidity analysis. It also describes the use of this nephelometer for context-based learning (CBL) experiments designed for teaching laboratories. The LED nephelometer is simple, low-cost, and robust, providing similar results as a…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Light, Measurement Equipment
Mayer, V. V.; Varaksina, E. I. – Physics Education, 2022
We propose a laboratory experiment on the quantitative study of the normal dispersion of light. A triangular isosceles prism made of flint glass TF3 is used as the object of study, and we describe a simple and affordable device for observing and photographing the dispersion spectrum on a smartphone. A possibility of the quantitative investigation…
Descriptors: Light, Physics, Science Experiments, Science Instruction
Parks, Beth; Benze, Hans – Physics Teacher, 2022
Student misconceptions of the double-slit experiment (Fig. 1) are abundant. The most common ones that we observe include: (1) belief that constructive interference requires both pathlengths to be integer multiples of the wavelength ("L[subscript 1] = n[subscript 1][lambda]" and "L[subscript 2] = n[subscript 2][lambda]") rather…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Physics, Science Experiments
Inbanathan, S. S. R.; Moorthy, K.; S., Ashok Kumar – Physics Teacher, 2021
The falling temperature of the photosphere with height is responsible for the effect known as limb darkening. The Sun is not equally bright all over the disc. When we observe the Sun towards the limbs, it appears to get darker. Light from the photosphere travels through an absorptive medium. Therefore, one can see only so far into the photosphere.…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Light
Blagotinšek, Ana Gostincar – Physics Teacher, 2023
Two misconceptions about the mechanism of image formation in the human eye are common among students and even in textbooks and other teaching materials. The first attributes all refraction to the eye lens; the second treats the eye as a pinhole camera. To reduce these persistent conceptions of students, a series of simple experiments is presented…
Descriptors: Vision, Science Instruction, Instructional Materials, Laboratory Experiments